The Guardian (USA)

Mercury to make travel changes after ‘provocateu­r’ confronts Griner at airport

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The day after Brittney Griner was confronted by a YouTube “provocateu­r” at Dallas-Fort Worth Internatio­nal Airport, her coach said the team will be making changes to security.

“We will ensure that our players and our organizati­on and our staff are safe,” said Vanessa Nygaard, Griner’s coach at the Phoenix Mercury. “We will be making [travel] adjustment­s that maybe should have happened before, but right now we’re going to prioritize the safety of our players and we’ve seen that the organizati­on has supported us.”

The incident certainly didn’t impact Griner’s performanc­e on Sunday against the Indiana Fever. She scored a season high 29 points and grabbed six rebounds in an 85-82 victory, just the second this season for the Mercury.

Griner usually speaks to reporters following the first road trip to each city, but Mercury officials decided to not make her available on Sunday.

Clearly, though, the incident had an impact on Phoenix. Longtime star Diana Taurasi’s pregame advice to Griner was simply to “breathe” and Taurasi asked the league not to shrug it off.

“It’s unnerving to be in a situation like that and unfortunat­ely, it was literally the first time we were in public together,” said Taurasi, who turned 41 on Sunday. “That can’t happen for our players or coaches. The safety of everyone comes first; basketball is secondary to all that. People have families, kids and to be put in that situation really is pretty disrespect­ful not only to BG but to our team, to the league. So hopefully they can take steps into making sure the security of our players throughout the league is at the forefront.”

Nygaard echoed those comments during a pregame statement on Sunday in which she offered support for Griner and concern about everyone who made the trip to Indiana. She also said Phoenix already has adjusted plans for future road trips though she declined to provide details, citing league policy and team safety protocols.

The controvers­y stems from a video posted Sunday by Alex Stein, a YouTuber, who shouted at Griner during the incident at the airport. He questioned Griner on topics ranging from whether she hated America to whether the trade for a Russian prisoner was a fair deal to obtain her release from Russia last year. Griner was released in December 2022 after being detained in Russia for nearly 10 months on drug charges.

She did not respond to Stein and has not spoken publicly about the airport incident since it occurred.

“No one should be a victim of targeted harassment,” Nygaard said. “I’m grateful that our team and our staff are physically well and most of all I’m grateful that BG has been back here in the United States for 185 days now. If her being home makes some people mad, I think that obviously says more about them than it does about her.”

Griner has been warmly received by crowds at home and on the road all season. This past week she played twice in her home state of Texas, and Indianapol­is was no different on Sunday as fans gave her the loudest ovation of any opponent during player introducti­ons.

Griner’s security has been a concern since before the season began. Even then, league officials were talking to Mercury officials and the All-Star center’s representa­tives about how to protect Griner and her teammates following the highly-publicized case.

The league granted Griner permission to book on to charter planes rather than traveling on commercial flights this season. WNBA teams have flown commercial­ly during the regular season since the league’s inception in 1997, although they fly charter during the playoffs and for back-to-back road games. It is not clear why Griner was flying with her teammates rather than on a charter flight this weekend.

Saturday’s incident may force the league to revisit the issue.

“That’s obviously nothing no one wants to deal with, especially on a business trip for work,” Phoenix center Brianna Turner said, noting the players were escorted to a private room in the airport after the incident with Stein. “We’re representi­ng the league, we’re representi­ng the city of Phoenix, our organizati­on and in times like that we don’t want to cause a big scene. We don’t want to like throw phones or say some things.”

Around the league, the reaction was almost unanimous.

Breanna Stewart, who is on the executive committee of the players’ union said everyone would support Griner flying privately.

“I think that you know, that there needs to be extra precaution­ary measures taken and you know, I don’t think anyone is against BG having charter flights whenever she wants, so that she can be herself and travel and be comfortabl­e and be safe,” Stewart said. “Because that’s the last thing we want is what happened yesterday.”

Longtime friend and former teammate Emma Cannon did not hide her disgust about what happened to Griner, a godparent of Cannon’s son.

“I’m not going to lie, that made me very angry,” the Fever forward said. “Then I saw a little snippet of the video, which was upsetting and then for that to be her first time flying commercial with the team like that, it’s upsetting.”

 ?? Photograph: Darron Cummings/AP ?? Brittney Griner put in a strong performanc­e this weekend despite the tough buildup to the game.
Photograph: Darron Cummings/AP Brittney Griner put in a strong performanc­e this weekend despite the tough buildup to the game.

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